Singh Dinesh, Banerji Ajit K, Dwarakanath Bilikere S, Tripathi Rajendra P, Gupta Jaganath P, Mathew T Lazar, Ravindranath Turuga, Jain Viney
Dharmshila Cancer Hospital, New Delhi, India.
Strahlenther Onkol. 2005 Aug;181(8):507-14. doi: 10.1007/s00066-005-1320-z.
Higher rates of glucose utilization and glycolysis generally correlate with poor prognosis in several types of malignant tumors. Own earlier studies on model systems demonstrated that the nonmetabolizable glucose analog 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-DG) could enhance the efficacy of radiotherapy in a dose-dependent manner by selectively sensitizing cancer cells while protecting normal cells. Phase I/II clinical trials indicated that the combination of 2-DG, at an oral dose of 200 mg/kg body weight (BW), with large fractions of gamma-radiation was well tolerated in cerebral glioma patients. Since higher 2-DG doses are expected to improve the therapeutic gain, present studies were undertaken to examine the tolerance and safety of escalating 2-DG dose during combined treatment (2-DG + radiotherapy) in glioblastoma multiforme patients.
Untreated patients with histologically proven glioblastoma multiforme (WHO criteria) were included in the study. Seven weekly fractions of (60)Co gamma-rays (5 Gy/fraction) were delivered to the tumor volume (presurgical CT/MRI evaluation) plus 3 cm margin. Escalating 2-DG doses (200-250-300 mg/kg BW) were administered orally 30 min before irradiation after overnight fasting. Acute toxicity and tolerance were studied by monitoring the vital parameters and side effects. Late radiation damage and treatment responses were studied radiologically and clinically in surviving patients.
Transient side effects similar to hypoglycemia were observed in most of the patients. Tolerance and patient compliance to the combined treatment were very good up to a 2-DG dose of 250 mg/kg BW. However, at the higher dose of 300 mg/kg BW, two out of six patients were very restless and could not complete treatment, though significant changes in the vital parameters were not observed even at this dose. No significant damage to the normal brain tissue was observed during follow-up in seven out of ten patients who received complete treatment and survived between 11 and 46 months after treatment.
Oral administration of 2-DG combined with large fractions of radiation (5 Gy/fraction/week) is safe and could be tolerated in glioblastoma patients without any acute toxicity and late radiation damage to the normal brain. Further clinical studies to evaluate the efficacy of the combined treatment are warranted.
在几种类型的恶性肿瘤中,较高的葡萄糖利用率和糖酵解水平通常与较差的预后相关。我们早期对模型系统的研究表明,不可代谢的葡萄糖类似物2-脱氧-D-葡萄糖(2-DG)可以通过选择性地使癌细胞敏感而保护正常细胞,从而以剂量依赖的方式提高放疗效果。I/II期临床试验表明,口服剂量为200mg/kg体重(BW)的2-DG与大分割γ射线联合应用时,脑胶质瘤患者耐受性良好。由于预计更高的2-DG剂量会提高治疗增益,因此进行了本研究,以检验在多形性胶质母细胞瘤患者联合治疗(2-DG+放疗)期间递增2-DG剂量的耐受性和安全性。
未经治疗且经组织学证实为多形性胶质母细胞瘤(WHO标准)的患者纳入本研究。对肿瘤体积(术前CT/MRI评估)加3cm边缘给予7次每周一次的(60)Coγ射线(5Gy/次)。在禁食过夜后,于照射前30分钟口服递增剂量的2-DG(200 - 250 - 300mg/kg BW)。通过监测生命体征参数和副作用来研究急性毒性和耐受性。对存活患者进行放射学和临床研究,以评估晚期放射性损伤和治疗反应。
大多数患者出现了类似于低血糖的短暂副作用。在2-DG剂量达250mg/kg BW时,患者对联合治疗的耐受性和依从性非常好。然而,在300mg/kg BW的较高剂量时,6名患者中有2名非常烦躁不安,无法完成治疗,尽管即使在此剂量下生命体征参数也未观察到显著变化。在接受完整治疗并在治疗后存活11至46个月的10名患者中,有7名在随访期间未观察到对正常脑组织的显著损伤。
口服2-DG联合大分割放疗(5Gy/次/周)在多形性胶质母细胞瘤患者中是安全的,且可耐受,对正常脑无任何急性毒性和晚期放射性损伤。有必要进一步开展临床研究以评估联合治疗的疗效。